family

[ fam-uh-lee, fam-lee ]
/ ˈfæm ə li, ˈfæm li /

noun, plural fam·i·lies.

adjective

Idioms for family

    in a/the family way, pregnant.

Origin of family

1350–1400; Middle English familie < Latin familia a household, the slaves of a household, equivalent to famul(us) servant, slave + -ia -y3

usage note for family

OTHER WORDS FROM family

an·ti·fam·i·ly, adjective in·ter·fam·i·ly, adjective

British Dictionary definitions for anti-family

family
/ (ˈfæmɪlɪ, ˈfæmlɪ) /

noun plural -lies

Word Origin for family

C15: from Latin familia a household, servants of the house, from famulus servant

Medical definitions for anti-family

family
[ fămə-lē, fămlē ]

n.

A group of blood relatives, especially parents and their children.
A taxonomic category of related organisms ranking below an order and above a genus.

Scientific definitions for anti-family

family
[ fămə-lē ]

A group of organisms ranking above a genus and below an order. The names of families end in -ae, a plural ending in Latin. In the animal kingdom, family names end in -idae, as in Canidae (dogs and their kin), while those in the plant kingdom usually end in -aceae, as in Rosaceae (roses and their kin). See Table at taxonomy.

Cultural definitions for anti-family

family

In biology, the classification lower than an order and higher than a genus. Lions, tigers, cheetahs, and house cats belong to the same biological family. Human beings belong to the biological family of hominids. (See Linnean classification.)

Idioms and Phrases with anti-family

family

see in a family way; run in the blood (family).